An Introduction to Intersection Homology with General Perversity Functions

An Introduction to Intersection Homology with General Perversity Functions

An introduction to intersection homology with general perversity functions Greg Friedman Department of Mathematics Texas Christian University Box 298900 Fort Worth, TX 76129 [email protected] June 26, 2009 2000 Mathematics Subject Classification: Primary: 55N33, 57N80; Secondary: 55N45, 55N30, 57P10 Keywords: intersection homology, perversity, pseudomanifold,Poincar´edual- ity, Deligne sheaf, intersection pairing Abstract We provide an expository survey of the different notions of perversity in intersection homology and how different perversities require different definitions of intersection homology theory itself. We trace the key ideas from the introduction of intersection homology by Goresky and MacPherson through to the recent and ongoing work of the author and others. Contents 1 Introduction 2 2 The original definition of intersection homology 5 2.1 Piecewise linear stratified pseudomanifolds . .5 2.2 Perversities . .6 2.3 Intersection homology . .7 2.4 Cones . .8 3 Goresky-MacPherson perversities 9 3.1 Some consequences of the Goresky-MacPherson conditions . 11 3.2 Singular chain intersection homology . 12 1 4 Sheaf theoretic intersection homology 12 4.1 Duality . 16 4.2 Cappell-Shaneson superduality . 18 5 Subperversities and superperversities 19 6 \Correcting" the definition of intersection chains 21 7 General perversities 23 7.1 Properties of intersection homology with general perversities and stratified coefficients . 25 8 Back to sheaf theory 28 8.1 A generalization of the Deligne construction . 28 8.2 Perverse sheaves . 29 9 Recent and future applications of general perversities 31 10 Saralegi's relative intersection chains 34 11 Habegger and Saper's codimension ≥ c intersection homology theory 36 1 Introduction When Goresky and MacPherson first introduced intersection homology in [32], they required its perversity parameters to satisfy a fairly rigid set of constraints. Their perversities were functions on the codimensions of strata,p ¯ : Z≥2 ! Z, satisfying p¯(2) = 0 andp ¯(k) ≤ p¯(k + 1) ≤ p¯(k) + 1: These strict requirements were necessary for Goresky and MacPherson to achieve their initial p¯ goals for intersection homology: that the intersection homology groups I H∗(X) should satisfy a generalized form of Poincar´eduality for stratified pseudomanifolds and that they should be topological invariants, i.e they should be independent of the choice of stratification of X. In the ensuing years, perversity parameters have evolved as the applications of intersec- tion homology have evolved, and in many cases the basic definitions of intersection homology itself have had to evolve as well. Today, there are important results that utilize the most general possible notion of a perversity as a function p¯ : fcomponents of singular strata of a stratified pseudomanifoldg ! Z: In this setting, one usually loses topological invariance of intersection homology (though this should be seen not as a loss but as an opportunity to study stratification data), but duality results remain, at least if one chooses the right generalizations of intersection homology. 2 Complicating this choice is the fact that there are a variety of approaches to intersection homology to begin with, even using Goresky and MacPherson's perversities. These include (at the least) the original simplicial chain definition [32]; Goresky and MacPherson's Deligne sheaves [33, 6]; King's singular chain intersection homology [32]; Cheeger's L2 cohomology and L2 Hodge theory [16]; perverse differential forms on Thom-Mather stratified spaces (and, later, on unfoldable spaces [7]), first published by Brylinski [8] but attributed to Goresky and MacPherson; and the theory of perverse sheaves [4]. Work to find the \correct" versions of these theories when general perversities are allowed has been performed by the author, using stratified coefficients for simplicial and singular intersection chains [26]; by Saralegi, using \relative" intersection homology and perverse differential forms in [54]; and by the author, generalizing the Deligne sheaf in [22]. Special cases of non-Goresky-MacPherson perversities in the L2 Hodge theory setting have also been considered by Hausel, Hunsicker, and Mazzeo [37]; Hunsicker and Mazzeo [39]; and Hunsicker [38]. And arbitrary perversities have been available from the start in the theory of perverse sheaves! This paper is intended to serve as something of a guidebook to the different notions of perversities and as an introduction to some new and exciting work in this area. Each stage of development of the idea of perversities was accompanied by a flurry of re-examinings of what it means to have an intersection homology theory and what spaces such a theory can handle as input, and each such re-examining had to happen within one or more of the contexts listed above. In many cases, the outcome of this re-examination led to a modification or expansion of the basic definitions. This has resulted in a, quite justified, parade of papers consumed with working through all the technical details. However, technicalities often have the unintended effect of obscuring the few key main ideas. Our goal then is to present these key ideas and their consequences in an expository fashion, referring the reader to the relevant papers for further technical developments and results. We hope that such a survey will provide something of an introduction to and overview of the recent and ongoing work of the author, but we also hope to provide a readable (and hopefully accurate!) historical account of this particular chain of ideas and an overview of the work of the many researchers who have contributed to it. We additionally hope that such an overview might constitute a suitable introduction for those wishing to learn about the basics of intersection homology and as preparation for those wishing to pursue the many intriguing new applications that general perversities bring to the theory. This exposition is not meant to provide a comprehensive historical account but merely to cover one particular line of development. We will focus primarily on the approaches to intersection homology by simplicial and singular chains and by sheaf theory. We will touch only tangentially upon perverse differential forms when we consider Saralegi's work in Section 10; we advise the reader to consult [54] for the state of the art, as well as references to prior work, in this area. Also, we will not discuss L2-cohomology. This is a very active field of research, as is well-demonstrated elsewhere in this volume [30], but the study of L2- cohomology and L2 Hodge theories that yield intersection homology with general perversities remains under development. The reader should consult the papers cited above for the work that has been done so far. We will briefly discuss perverse sheaves in Section 8.2, but the reader should consult [4] or any of the variety of fine surveys on perverse sheaves that have 3 appeared since for more details. We will not go into many of the myriad results and applications of intersection homol- ogy theory, especially those beyond topology proper in analysis, algebraic geometry, and representation theory. For broader references on intersection homology, the reader might start with [6, 42, 2]. These are also excellent sources for the material we will be assuming regarding sheaf theory and derived categories and functors. We proceed roughly in historical order as follows: Section 2 provides the original Goresky- MacPherson definitions of PL pseudomanifolds and PL chain intersection homology. We also begin to look closely at the cone formula for intersection homology, which will have an important role to play throughout. In Section 3, we discuss the reasons for the original Goresky-MacPherson conditions on perversities and examine some consequences, and we introduce King's singular intersection chains. In Section 4, we turn to the sheaf-theoretic definition of intersection homology and introduce the Deligne sheaf. We discuss the intersec- tion homology version of Poincar´eduality, then we look at our first example of an intersection homology result that utilizes a non-Goresky-MacPherson perversity, the Cappell-Shaneson superduality theorem. In Section 5, we discuss \subperversities" and \superperversities". Here we first observe the schism that occurs between chain-theoretic and sheaf-theoretic intersection homology when perversities do not satisfy the Goresky-MacPherson conditions. Section 6 introduces stratified coefficients, which were developed by the author in order to correct the chain version of intersection homology for it to conform with the Deligne sheaf version. In Section 7, we discuss the further evolution of the chain theory to the most general possible perversities and the ensuing results and applications. Section 8 contains the further generalization of the Deligne sheaf to general perversities, as well as a brief discussion of per- verse sheaves and how general perversity intersection homology arises in that setting. Some indications of recent work and work-in-progress with these general perversities is provided in Section 9. Finally, Sections 10 and 11 discuss some alternative approaches to intersection homology with general perversities. In Section 10, we discuss Saralegi's \relative intersection chains", which are equivalent to the author's stratified coefficients when both are defined. In Section 11, we present the work of Habegger and Saper from [35]. This work encompasses another option to correcting the schism presented in Section 5 by providing a sheaf theory that agrees with King's

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